Parantica melaneus

Parantica melaneus, the chocolate tiger, is a butterfly found in Asia that belongs to the crows and tigers, that is, the danaid group of the brush-footed butterflies family.

Chocolate tiger
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Nymphalidae
Genus: Parantica
Species:
P. melaneus
Binomial name
Parantica melaneus
(Cramer, 1775)
Synonyms

Danais melanea

Description

Upperside: forewing black, Hindwing very dark purplish brown, with faintly bluish white subhyaline markings. Underside: forewing black, the apex broadly suffused with bright chestnut-brown; hindwing bright chestnut-browvn, with a patch on the costa and a portion of the disc and termen very much darker in most specimens. For the rest exactly resembles D. tytia in form and disposition of the subhyaline markings, but these are more clearlv defined and it is proportionately smaller, the subterminal and terminal spots on the hindwing-generally very distinct. Antennas black; head and thorax black, spotted with white; abdomen bright ochraceous. Expanse: 94–100 mm.[1]

Range

The eastern Himalayas; Assam; Burma; Tenasserim, extending to the Malayan subregion.[1]

gollark: Ugh. Stupid 5-hour cooldown on CB egg trading.
gollark: I mean, if you can't see them anyway, it seems silly that you should be able to see them.
gollark: That's not a bug. The no-lineage-on-cave-eggs thing is a bugfix.
gollark: Are yellow zyus worth much?
gollark: I'd argue that bugfixing is more important than new features.

See also

References

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